I’m worried about eFootball. It’s not just the 30th September launch – what Konami has already admitted amounts to an extremely limited demo with just a handful of teams available to play. It’s not just that key gameplay features, including new mechanics, animations and even kicks won’t make it in time for that initial launch . It’s not just that the only actual proper gameplay footage we’ve seen from the game – and we’re a week before launch now – was not direct feed and appeared to bust an embargo . It’s not just that Konami is currently selling a £33 eFootball premium player pack (essentially a bunch of loot boxes) you can’t use until November. It’s not just that eFootball is designed to be played cross-platform with mobile devices. It’s not even the horrible new name for PES – and an accompanying symbol that looks so similar to the euro € symbol that the first thing I think when I see eFootball is that it wants my money. It’s all this combined, and what it does for how I think about the game. eFootball is sufficiently cross-platform enough that mobile users are on a level playing field with PlayStation…